So when Astarial got off the boat, he met this scruffy looking guy on the docks calling himself a captain. Ast had never seen someone who looked like that be the captain of anything, but this captain told him of some magical rock he could bind himself to in case the worst happened.Shalvenay wrote:What would a character's observations about seeing folks die and come back again repeatedly (or better yet, returning from the Fugue themselves on multiple occasions) tell them?Lorkas wrote: ... None of our characters know ICly that they will be able to respawn an unlimited number of times, but the metagame is strong and largely accepted as normal on this issue.
Ast made a mental note to check it out- much, much later.
Then Ast made some friends, and one of his friends asked where he was bound to. He looked at them blankly, and they took him to a binding stone.
Ast thinks this a little less crazy now.
Now, I could go about a dozen different ways with justifications here- the stone consumes a bit of your life force as the moment of your demise is about to occur, and instantly teleports you to the stone. This in turn gives the stone the power to function for the next person bound to it who needs to use it.
In this instance, "respawning" is the absence of actually dying.
Another instance that can work for you, depending on your character and circumstances- is that you die, and your soul waits at a location in the fugue corresponding to the location of the binding stone. By 'binding' to the stone, you enable your Patron's emissaries to find you faster, and if you died in service of your Patron's causes, in exchange for some of your life force they will reverse the moment of death for you.
In this case, you actually die, and an emissary of your god resurrects you at the binding stone.
Artificial phylactery? Rip in the barrier between the fugue plane and the prime material plane? (Natural or created?!)
You may find these circumstances contrived, but by the lore (and I'd dare go so far as to say in most high fantasy), this is the nature of death in a world like FR. It is not always as permanent as it ought to be. Plenty of people might die permanently.
The only irreversible death is one of age- you could hypothetically Wish to return someone who died of old age to life. But the evil cackling you hear in the background while you read this? That's the DM, paying very close attention to your every word- or lack thereof- as you make said wish.